Erika found a few things from this book that she wanted to make today and what started out as one project turned into three. The first is a very loose interpretation of Huichol Yarn Art. The Huichols of Northwest Mexico make yarn bowls that tell stories by pressing yarn into warmed beeswax. The book suggested gluing yarn on the inside and outside of a paper bowl. We didn't have a paper bowl, so we used a cardboard coffee canister that we cut to the size we wanted. It was too hard for Erika to get the yard to twirl around in the outside, so we only did the outside. It was a mess while we worked on it, but the glue dried totally invisible. I'm on the lookout for some beeswax though....
Next we made a worry doll from Central America. Erika was really interested in the idea behind these dolls: You tell your worry to the doll and put her under your pillow. The worry doll takes your worries away. I'm curious what worries the doll heard tonight. We used a clothes pin and some of the fabric that we got from Art and Scraps last week. Erika chose the fabric, helped cut it, applied glue, and drew the face. This would have been hard for her to do on her own, but she loved the result.
The final project was a pouch, which she desperately wanted, but I had to do most of the work. This is a good project to prepare ahead of time. We cut and folded some felt and I poked holes in it with a screwdriver (know of a better way?) Erika sewed it with me guiding the way. She chose the beads and sewed them on, but I had to tie everything off. She kept her worry doll in this all day and wore it around her neck. The inspiration was a Lakota-Sioux medicine bag, which are made of animal skin.
The great thing about these projects was learning and talking about the people and cultures that inspired our work.
Who is this woman?
My name is Niku and this is my virtual home. Much like our real home, it is filled with kid's art, books, food, and a constant desire to grow and learn. My girls are eight, five, and one. My husband makes me laugh every single day.
Popular Posts
-
Once this loaf was out of the oven it was hard to keep the girls away from it and after just one bite Erika proclaimed it was the best bread...
-
Erika filled her sticker chart and earned a visit to the Dollar store yesterday where she bought a Barbie-like doll whose legs are always f...
-
I've been sick with a cold for a few days and all I wanted today was some fresh bread. Last week I made this French bread I found over...
-
Erika was asking me a lot of questions about my childhood today. "Tell me a story about when you were little," she kept asking. ...
-
Over the weekend the girls requested to share a room. Their rooms were directly across from each other before and they played in both rooms...
-
We ordered pizza last night for dinner and as I was about to recycle the boxes this morning I remembered a pizza box easel idea I saw in Mar...
Categories
Archives
-
▼
2010
(84)
-
▼
March
(26)
- The Greatest Bread Erika Has Ever Tasted
- High School Musical
- From the Library
- Pasta Landscape
- {this moment}
- Let us Eat Cake
- Bread and Butter
- Sunday in Detroit
- Stained Eggs
- Dear Erika, I am sitting here in the living room a...
- {this moment}
- A-ha!
- Catching Dreams
- {this moment}
- Belle Isle
- Glitter and Glue Collage
- Splash!
- Glorious Morning Glory Muffins
- {this moment}
- Art Tissue Paper
- 100 Almost Free Pictures
- Oobleck is Rad
- Waffles
- Pocky is rad.
- From the Library
- From the Library
-
▼
March
(26)
love your blog, niku! i'm definitely going to check out that arts & crafts book, not just for eli and vivian, but also for my first graders. thanks for the info...
you could use a hole puncher...